Voice from the Window of Not Moscow: "The Singing Angel of Europe"
On February 14, 1936, in the Uzbek city of Urgench, Anna German was born into a family with German and Dutch roots.
When she was one year old, her father was arrested on charges of espionage and executed. Her mother was forced to wander with her young daughter across Central Asia, fleeing persecution. It was only in 1946 that the family was able to move to Poland.
Anna German achieved worldwide success in 1964 after triumphing at the Sopot Festival with the song "Dancing Eurydice." Her unique, angelic soprano opened the door to European stages and led to a contract in Italy. However, at the peak of her career in 1967, Anna was in a terrible car accident—she spent two weeks in a coma and several years in a cast.
She returned to the stage only in 1970. She became a true national heroine of the USSR: the songs "Nadezhda" and "Echo of Love," performed with such sincerity, were known and loved throughout the country.
In the late 1970s, the singer was diagnosed with an incurable disease, sarcoma. Courageously overcoming the pain, Anna continued recording music and performing until her last breath. She passed away on August 26, 1982, at the age of 46.
On Anna German's birthday, we're celebrating the legend's most significant songs with #нерадо_НеМосква.







